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Clear Facebook success trends starting to emerge

Clear Facebook success trends starting to emerge

As we knew it would, strong patterns are emerging from what makes successful Facebook marketing versus what makes waste–of–time Facebook marketing.  Whilst it would take a braver man than me to venture too far from the general rule “we don’t know, yet” it does seem that the common sense rule “it’s social media, not commercial media, people, the clue is in the name” will keep you generally on the right track.

If you were in a sales presentation around a Board Room table and someone asked you what your company did, you would answer the question very differently to the way you might answer the same question asked by a friend at a dinner party.  If you answered too casually in the Board Room you would lose the sale, and if you answered too formally at a dinner party you would risk the verbal wrath of the Come Dine With Me narrator guy.

In other words, context impacts content.

Or to put it a different way, context doesn’t change the content but rather the style in which is it presented.  This is the big theme which is emerging from Facebook studies.

Here’s the light social stuff which is reaping benefits for brands:

The beleaguered and busy customer is happy to engage with promotions and lightweight interaction, but that’s as far as their interest and attention generally stretches.

Integral marketing is working nicely with relationships between offline and online working particularly well; FMCG sector is leading the charge in this regard.

Conversation between brands and their customers is possible, and with good strategy behind communication, positive conversations can prevail in the social arena.  Meaningful customer service can take place.

However as soon as brands go heavier or deeper or more salesy than that, trouble starts.

“Like” gates are driving people mad and do your brand damage.  Either engage with your customers or don’t, but don’t tease them by putting desirable content beyond a “like” gate.  Customer behaviour is clear in this environment; like … read content … unlike … never come back.

Deep campaigns aren’t working.  They are very alluring and can get the creative team very excited but too often we see that punters just don’t care enough.  Campaigns with lots of pages, interaction, inbuilt apps and linked micro–sites are just too much like hard work for too many customers.  Treasure hunts, games, prediction contests and team games are too high maintenance for the weary consumer.

Extended permissions are stretching customer patience to breaking point, with drop off rates as high as 30% for trusted brands.  What asking someone for access to their entire demographic profile from an un–trusted brand does to their perception just isn’t worth thinking about.

Perhaps counter–intuitively sweepstakes and viral promotions just aren’t going viral.  Even massive incentives aren’t enough to get anyone other than bargain hunters (who have no loyalty, or even interest, in the brand) motivated to fill out forms.

More often, less deep, more genuine, is how customers are expecting to engage with you online.  The theme of the hour is consistent, lightweight engagement.  Sure, that’s not a strategy by itself, but already it’s enough to give us some broad parameters to run more successful campaigns and avoid common pitfalls.

By Gareth Dunlop

Gareth formed Fathom in 2011 and has been in the business of design performance for over two decades.

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